at least 2 weeks, during which the person experiences
a depressed mood or loss of pleasure in nearly all
activities. In addition, four of the following symp-
toms are present: changes in appetite or weight, sleep,
or psychomotor activity; decreased energy; feelings
of worthlessness or guilt; difficulty thinking, con-
centrating, or making decisions; or recurrent thoughts
of death or suicidal ideation, plans, or attempts. These
symptoms must be present every day for 2 weeks
and result in significant distress or impair social,
occupational, or other important areas of function-
ing (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2000).
Some people also have delusions and hallucinations;
the combination is referred to as psychotic depression.
Bipolar disorder is diagnosed when a person’s
mood cycles between extremes of mania and depres-
sion (as described above). Maniais a distinct period
during which mood is abnormally and persistently
elevated, expansive, or irritable. The period lasts
1 week (unless the person is hospitalized and treated
sooner). At least three of the following symptoms
accompany the manic episode: inflated self-esteem
or grandiosity; decreased need for sleep; pressured
speech(unrelenting, rapid, often loud talking with-
out pauses); flight of ideas(racing thoughts, often
unconnected); distractibility; increased involvement
in goal-directed activity or psychomotor agitation;
and excessive involvement in pleasure-seeking activ-
ities with a high potential for painful consequences
(APA, 2000). Some people also exhibit delusions and
hallucinations during a manic episode. Hypomania
is a period of abnormally and persistently elevated,
expansive, or irritable mood lasting 4 days and includ-
ing three or four of the additional symptoms described
earlier. The difference is that hypomanic episodes do
not impair the person’s ability to function (in fact he
or she may be quite productive) and there are no psy-
chotic features (delusions and hallucinations). A mixed
episode is diagnosed when the person experiences
both mania and depression nearly every day for at
least 1 week. These mixed episodes often are called
rapid-cycling. For the purpose of medical diagnosis,
bipolar disorders are described as
- Bipolar I disorder—one or more manic or
mixed episodes usually accompanied by
major depressive episodes - Bipolar II disorder—one or more major
depressive episode accompanied by at least
one hypomanic episode
People with bipolar disorder may experience a
euthymic or normal mood and affect between extreme
episodes or they may have a depressed mood swing
following a manic episode before returning to a eu-
thymic mood. For some, euthymic periods between
extremes are quite short. For others euthymia lasts
months or even years.
RELATED DISORDERS
Other disorders classified in the DSM-IV-TR (2000)
as mood disorders but with symptoms that are less
severe or of shorter duration include the following:
- Dysthymic disorder is characterized by at
least 2 years of depressed mood for more
days than not with some additional less severe
symptoms that do not meet the criteria for a
major depressive episode. - Cyclothymic disorder is characterized by
2 years of numerous periods of both hypo-
manic symptoms that do not meet the criteria
for bipolar disorder. - Substance-induced mood disorder is charac-
terized by a prominent and persistent distur-
bance in mood that is judged to be a direct
physiological consequence of ingested sub-
stances such as alcohol, other drugs, or toxins. - Mood disorder due to a general medical con-
dition is characterized by a prominent and
persistent disturbance in mood that is judged
to be a direct physiological consequence of a
medical condition such as degenerative
neurological conditions, cerebrovascular
disease, metabolic or endocrine conditions,
autoimmune disorders, HIV infections, or
certain cancers.
Other disorders that involve changes in mood
include the following: - Seasonal affective disorder(SAD) has
two subtypes. In one, most commonly called
winter depression or fall-onset SAD, people
experience increased sleep, appetite, and
carbohydrate cravings; weight gain; inter-
personal conflict; irritability; and heaviness
in the extremities beginning in late autumn
and abating in spring and summer. The other
subtype, called spring-onset SAD, is less com-
mon with symptoms of insomnia, weight loss,
and poor appetite lasting from late spring or
early summer until early fall (Singer, 2001). - Postpartum or “maternity” blues are a fre-
quent normal experience after delivery of a
baby characterized by labile mood and affect,
crying spells, sadness, insomnia, and anxiety.
Symptoms begin approximately 1 day after
delivery, usually peak in 3 to 7 days, and
disappear rapidly with no medical treatment
(Jones & Venis, 2001). - Postpartum depression meets all the criteria
for a major depressive episode with onset
within 4 weeks of delivery. - Postpartum psychosis is a psychotic episode
developing within 3 weeks of delivery begin-
ning with fatigue, sadness, emotional lability,
poor memory, and confusion and progressing
15 MOODDISORDERS ANDSUICIDE 333